The Real Game-Changer: Why Babes Golf’s True Spec Partnership Matters More Than You Think
After 35 years covering professional golf—and having spent time on tour as Tom Lehman’s caddie back in the ’90s—I’ve watched this game evolve in ways both encouraging and frustrating. We’ve seen equipment technology revolutionize how the ball flies, shaft technology democratize distance, and social media make every swing go viral. But here’s what we haven’t solved nearly well enough: getting women properly fitted for clubs that actually match their game.
So when Babes Golf announced its exclusive partnership with True Spec Golf this week, my first instinct wasn’t to smile and move on. It was to recognize this as a quiet but significant inflection point in how the game is being reshaped—not by TV ratings or major championships, but by the mundane work of making golf actually accessible.
The Hand-Me-Down Problem Nobody Talks About
Babes Golf founder Alex Andersen nailed something in her statement that I’ve personally witnessed countless times on the women’s side of the game: the equipment mismatch problem. She said it plainly: “I just went and got a starter set, which is perfect if you’re just starting out. But a lot of times women come to us and they have hand-me-downs from their husband, these really heavy clubs. Golf is already hard and it’s just making it harder.”
This isn’t conjecture. This is lived experience from someone building an actual community, not just theorizing about inclusion. And here’s what strikes me after three decades in this business: nobody in the equipment industry has systematically addressed this until now.
Think about it. We’ve had fitting technology for years. PGA professionals have been getting fitted. Tour players have custom shops. But for the average woman golfer—particularly one playing hand-me-downs or off-the-rack starter sets—the fitting experience has largely been an afterthought. Many women don’t even know quality club fitting exists beyond the big-box retailers, or they’ve had the awkward experience of walking into a golf shop where they felt like an interloper rather than a customer.

The True Spec partnership changes the calculus here. With nearly 40 locations across the country, the partnership creates what Andersen called “a very educational experience” that removes friction. Premier and Elite members get one complimentary fitting annually—that’s a $375 value—while National tier members receive 50 percent discounts. That’s real money on the table.
Why This Matters Beyond the Women’s Game
Here’s where my years on tour come into play: partnerships like this reveal where an industry is actually headed. The equipment companies understand something fundamental that casual observers might miss—the growth market isn’t in selling premium $500 drivers to existing golfers. It’s in converting casual participants into committed players.
Andersen outlined the progression perfectly: “About three or four years in, the girls are ready to move on from their starter set. They’ve really invested a lot more into their game, they’ve taken clinics, they’ve gone to lessons, and they’re realizing their set is not for them.”
That’s a retention funnel. And retention is where money actually lives in golf long-term. A woman who shoots 95 once is entertainment. A woman who shoots 95 consistently, invests in lessons, travels for golf weekends, and buys equipment is a sustainable customer for 30 years. True Spec understands this. So does Babes Golf.
The Community Angle: Golf’s Real Competitive Advantage
I’ve covered 15 Masters tournaments. I’ve watched Tiger revolutionize the game, seen Phil’s genius up close, covered the rise of international competition. But in my experience, what actually grows golf isn’t any single player or championship—it’s community. It’s people playing together, teaching their friends, traveling together, staying connected.
Babes Golf has built something genuinely novel here. Their three membership tiers—National ($100), Premier ($200), and Elite ($450) annually—aren’t just about the perks. They’re scaffolding for a community. The app that connects members, the “Babecation” trips (May in La Quinta, October in Missouri—already sold out), the range meetups and clinics. These aren’t gimmicks. They’re infrastructure.
The True Spec partnership fits seamlessly into this because it addresses a real gap: when a woman decides she’s serious enough about golf to invest in proper equipment, she now has a guided pathway. And she’s not doing it alone—she’s doing it as part of a community where 40 other women are probably doing the same thing that month.
What I Think This Really Signals
Equipment companies getting serious about community partnerships and accessibility—particularly for women golfers—signals a recognition that the old gatekeeping model is dead. You can’t sell your way to growth anymore. You have to build a culture that people want to join.
True Spec president Scott Anderson said it: “We are dedicated to growing the game of golf, and as a company, our goal is to give every player we fit the best possible experience. We have always encouraged women to embrace the game, and a big part of being able to do that is by having a welcoming environment to be properly fit for clubs.”
That’s not marketing speak. That’s a company recognizing where the game is actually heading. In my three decades covering professional golf, I’ve learned that the tour is where the spotlight is, but the accessibility market is where the actual growth happens.
Babes Golf has built something real—a genuine community of 10,000-plus members who’ve chosen to be part of something together. Now they’re adding the infrastructure to keep those members progressing rather than plateauing. That’s the kind of structural thinking that moves the needle on participation.
It’s not flashy. It won’t make SportsCenter. But ask me what matters more to the long-term health of golf in 2024—another 48-hour golf league or women getting properly fitted equipment within their community? The answer isn’t even close.
